Selected Orations and Letters of Cicero: To which is Added the Catiline of SallustScott, Foresman and Company, 1910 - 443 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 100
Pagina 13
... means all that is clear , direct and forcible . It is doubtful whether any writer of any age has been more widely read ; it is certain that none has exercised a more powerful influence upon the world . There is no style of literature ...
... means all that is clear , direct and forcible . It is doubtful whether any writer of any age has been more widely read ; it is certain that none has exercised a more powerful influence upon the world . There is no style of literature ...
Pagina 17
... means ; but the Sicilians had not forgotten his upright- ness in his quaestorship and his eloquence in the prosecution of Verres . With their assistance he furnished grain at un- usually low rates , and the grateful people received with ...
... means ; but the Sicilians had not forgotten his upright- ness in his quaestorship and his eloquence in the prosecution of Verres . With their assistance he furnished grain at un- usually low rates , and the grateful people received with ...
Pagina 20
... means of canvassing , lawful or unlawful , to defeat Cicero of the other candidates they had no fears . Catiline found friends to assist him with their money and credit in the purchase of votes , and at the expense of other friends ...
... means of canvassing , lawful or unlawful , to defeat Cicero of the other candidates they had no fears . Catiline found friends to assist him with their money and credit in the purchase of votes , and at the expense of other friends ...
Pagina 22
... means countenanced or employed by the Romans in their party struggles . One last resort remained , and so without openly renouncing the support of the democrats he strove to attach to himself a personal following , not a ' party , ' of ...
... means countenanced or employed by the Romans in their party struggles . One last resort remained , and so without openly renouncing the support of the democrats he strove to attach to himself a personal following , not a ' party , ' of ...
Pagina 48
... mean a charge , trial or punishment in which the life of a citizen was at stake , but such a one as involved the whole or partial loss of his civitas . It is very important to remember this when reading of Roman courts . Citizenship was ...
... mean a charge , trial or punishment in which the life of a citizen was at stake , but such a one as involved the whole or partial loss of his civitas . It is very important to remember this when reading of Roman courts . Citizenship was ...
Parole e frasi comuni
aedile apodosis apud atque autem bellum Caesar Catiline causa Cicero civium clause comitia consul Coss cuius dicere eius enim eōrum erat esset etiam exercitu fuisse fuit haec hanc homines hominum huic huius hunc igitur illa illud illum ipse ipsō legatus Lentulus Lucullus magistrates Metellus mihi Mithridatic War modo multa name.-E neque nihil nisi nōn nōs numquam nunc omnēs omnia omnibus omnis omnium ōnis oration ōris Pompey populi possit potest praetor prō pron propraetor quae quaestor quam quibus quid quidem Quirītēs quis quō quod rēbus rei publicae rēs Roman Rōmānī Rome Sallust sẽ senate senātūs sibi Sicily sōlum subst Sulla sunt tamen tantō tantum tātis tense tibi tion urbe verb vērō Verres vērum vestrīs vōbīs vōs
Brani popolari
Pagina 425 - Postremo Caesar in animum induxerat laborare, vigilare; negotiis amicorum intentus, sua neglegere, nihil denegare, quod dono dignum esset; sibi magnum imperium, exercitum, bellum novom exoptabat, ubi virtus enitescere posset.
Pagina 421 - Komae sint, aut a popularibus coniurationis aut a multitudine conducta per vim eripiantur. quasi vero mali atque is scelesti tantum modo in urbe et non per totam Italiam sint, aut non ibi plus possit audacia, ubi ad defendundum opes minores sunt. qua re vanum equidem hoc consilium est, si periculum ex illis metuit: si in tanto omnium metu solus non timet, eo magis i« refert me mihi atque vobis timere.
Pagina 413 - Omnis homines, patres conscripti, qui de rebus dubiis consultant, ab odio, amicitia, ira atque misericordia vacuos esse decet. Haud facile animus verum providet, ubi illa officiant, neque quisquam omnium lubidini simul et usui paruit.
Pagina 178 - ... conspectus = coetus, qui est in conspectu. hie locus: ie, the rostra, the speaker's platform in the forum, so called because it was ornamented with the beaks of ships taken from the people of Antium in the Latin war, 338 BC ad agendum: sc.
Pagina 417 - Omnia mala exempla ex rebus bonis orta sunt. Sed ubi imperium ad ignaros [eius] aut minus bonos pervenit, novom illud exemplum ab dignis et idoneis ad indignos et non idoneos transfertur.
Pagina 416 - At aliae leges item condemnatis civibus non animam eripi, sed exilium permuti iubent. An quia gravius est verberari quam necari? Quid autem acerbum aut nimis grave est in homines tanti facinoris convictos? Sin quia levius est, qui convenit in minore negotio legem timere, cum eam in maiore neglegeris?